Would have been at all three had I been able to clone myself. The Johann concert was fabulous, thanks.
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My favourite discovery of the year.
Warfare (2025)
Szindbád (1971)
Night of the Juggler (1980)
Confidence (1980)
Sirat (2025)
Redux Redux (2025)
Butthole Surfers: Hole Truth and Nothing Butt (2025)
Return From The Ashes (1965)
The Ice Tower (2025)
Bullhead (2011)
The Chaser (2008)
The Appointment (1981)
Nada (1974)
Super excited to welcome @harbottlestores.bsky.social to the Miskapodium on Tuesday, for this dreamy presentation.
Tix: billetto.co.uk/e/and-where-...
@letterboxd.social lists have been updated!
Busy weekend ahead!
See you at the Horse Hospital!
Even worse luck in The Day of the Jackal.
it's so funny that alex jones was totally right about everything, the government is a bunch of drug-addled pedophiles and masked regime thugs are grabbing people off the streets, and now he has to pretend it's all a hoax
Guardian headline: 'Demonic' Wind in the Willows jumper banned from Westminster Abbey
Our Piper at the Gates of Dawn jumper stirred a bit of Satanic Panic! Thank you, @davidmbarnett.bsky.social, for covering this story for The Guardian.
By popular demand, you can get the jumper that got banned from Westminster Abbey here: everpress.com/hellebore-pi...
Brolin must run a marathon in this movie, in which he sprained an ankle which saw production shut down for a fortnight and original director Sidney J Furie walk out in a huff. Might be the best film I've seen all year.
Highlights include an insane car chase across Central Park featuring Mandy Patinkin as a rather improbable Latino cab driver and a full throttle Dan Hedaya blasting out windows in Fifth Avenue.
Cue an absurdly entertaining chase across the scuzzier parts of New York - the Bronx in particular looks like it's just had a visit from the Luftwaffe - engaging with Puerto Rican knife gangs and enraged pimps.
Poster of an enraged James Brolin ripping apart New York in the Night of the Juggler
Had a splendid time watching @filmsradiance.bsky.social's superb 4k restoration of lost 1980s sleazeball classic Night of the Juggler. Creepy psycho Cliff Gorman gets more than he bargained for when he kidnaps ex-cop James Brolin's daughter in a case of mistaken identity.
Wonder why this scene looks so familiar...
#WildlifeWednesday 🐦🐕
Terence Stamp looking perturbed in Toby Dammit
Ghostly image of Nico on Marble Index album cover
Quote with your favourite film and album from the year you were born.
Happy birthday squire! 🦇
I’m trialling Bournemouth v Fulham but not having quite the same effect.
Saw a research preview of it back in March and absolutely loved it. Wonderfully sinister, although the questionnaire afterwards seemed quite concerned that we might not understand the plot!
On very decent and quite spiky form!
Risky to lose him and Dango when we're already thin squad wise and Brooksy has made noises about moving on too. Annoyingly, Sini is actually really good despite his Junior Stanislas levels of fitness. Would be disappointing to offload him at a massive loss when he's virtually fit again (allegedly).
Be surprised they'd let him be part of the kit launch if he was leaving. And Cruzeiro's most expensive current player cost €8m so unless we're prepared to take a massive bath on him I can't see it.
In the 2010s my mother was making some fairy cakes and topped them with some hundreds and thousands. I thought the packaging looked a bit odd and discovered the expiry date was May 1977. Somehow we survived.
Hope it didn't get too Jacob's Ladder.
Some days you just wanna give up , let everything go and follow the light inside of a red cabbage
The front cover of 'Picnic on Craggy Island, the surreal joys of producing Father Ted', illustrated with snapshots of the filming of 'Father Ted'
These have arrived! - the finished, hardback copies of a little book I've written about the joyfully unpredictable experience of producing Father Ted.
Publication is Feb 20th but I'd like to give away two copies early - RT by Saturday 6pm and my dog Watson will pick the winners.
Always amused me that on page one of Call Of The Dead Smiley is described by his wife as 'breathtakingly ordinary', and by Le Carre as short and fat and wearer of bad clothes that 'hung on his squat frame like skin on a shrunken toad.' Then they cast James Mason in the film version.
The dubbing is pretty shonky but the cast is decent. Enjoyed the bleakness of the ending.
We'll have some more copies of the book available at this special event in London on January 25.
www.facebook.com/events/90341...